Everyone In Town Knows About The Cat Car—But No One’s Asking Who Left It There

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It’s been parked behind the old flooring warehouse for years—rusted, wheel-less, half-swallowed by weeds. Most people walk past without even turning their heads. But if you look closely, the back seat breathes.

Blankets. Bowls. Fur.

Cats. At least eight of them. Nobody claims them.

Nobody feeds them. But somehow, they survive. Some days, you’ll spot a fresh can cracked open on the curb.

A half-empty bag of kibble tucked under the passenger seat. The front dashboard always has a towel folded just right, like someone still tucks them in at night. I asked the clerk at the corner mart.

He said, “Oh yeah, the cat car. Been there forever.”

I asked the maintenance guy. He said, “They’re clean cats.

They don’t bother nobody.”

I asked the woman from the church pantry. She just sighed and said, “It’s not the cats I worry about. It’s who they’re waiting for.”

That stuck with me.

Because when she said it, she looked down the road, like she expected someone to walk up any second. I kept thinking about it all that night. Who could they be waiting for?

Why leave cats in an old junked car? Why keep feeding them but never show your face? The next morning, I walked to the warehouse.

The air smelled of wet concrete and rust. The car sat there like always, its blue paint barely showing through flakes of brown. The cats blinked at me from the windows.

One stretched across the back seat, another leapt onto the hood as if guarding the others. I crouched and whispered, “Who takes care of you?”

The cats only blinked, tails flicking, eyes reflecting the pale light. That evening, I brought a small can of tuna and set it by the curb.

I didn’t see anyone, but the next morning the can was gone—clean, as though washed and carried away. It became a routine. Every couple of days I’d leave food.

And every time, it vanished by sunrise. The cats grew more curious about me. They began meowing softly when I came near, rubbing against the cracked door frame, watching me with calm, trusting eyes.

But I never saw the other person. Until one night. It was late—nearly midnight.

I had trouble sleeping and decided to walk to clear my head. The street was quiet, just the distant hum of a truck on the highway. As I neared the warehouse, I spotted movement.

A small figure hunched by the car, a flashlight dimly glowing. I froze behind a stack of pallets. The figure opened a bag and set down bowls of food, patting each cat on the head.

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